sycasey said:
Cal88 said:
People on here are tone deaf with regards to the basic realities in this conflict, for instance, the fact that Crimea is a Russian province, has always been, since the late 1700s, and its annexation to Russia reflects the freewill of its overwhelmingly Russian native population. I've provided the basic facts from wiki and other sources, yet that reality doesn't even register. This is a conflict based on narratives, not facts, it's almost useless to argue in that kind of broken cognitive framework.
Also, what the hell are you talking about here? Russia lost Crimea with the breakup of the USSR in 1991. So no, it has not "always been" a Russian province. What is this revisionist history?
If you want a Wiki link, here you go:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crimea_in_the_post-Soviet_era_(1991-2014)
I'm not sure where ignorance stops and disingenuousness starts here, it's probably a combination of the two. In any case, it's a tiresome process, and the reason why I don't answer every query or bad spin on this thread, but here we go again, quoting my posts above:
Crimea had been part of Russia from 1783, when the Russian Empire annexed it a decade after defeating Ottoman forces in the Battle of Kozludzha, until 1954, when the Soviet government transferred Crimea from the Russian Soviet Socialist Republic to the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic
for purely arbitrary Soviet Socialist political reasons.
There hasn't been any armed resistance to the Russian annexation, because it was very broadly popular. If anything Crimeans were very pissed at Ukraine for cutting off their water supply, a move done out of pure spite as the water from the canal supplying Crimea was just diverted off into the Black Sea. Ukraine also cut off electricity. It's ironic that today the tables are turned. Here is Zelensky in his pre-presidential comedian days mocking Crimeans being cut off of their water supply:
Do you think Crimeans, who are over 3/4 Russian, really like the Kiev regime who cut off their water, and a president who made fun of their misery, and want to impose on them the use of a foreign language, or that they yearn to integrate the poorest, most corrupt country in Europe, with a GDP per capita equivalent to that of Namibia and El Salvador, 3 times lower that that of Russia? Ukrainian is as foreign to Crimea as Catalan would be to Madrid, or Occitan to Parisians.
Crimea is a breadbasket with a mild climate and a thriving agriculture and wine country that ground down to a halt after Ukraine cut off their water. Russia restored their water access, they also invested heavily into Crimea's infrastructure with a large new modern airport (Russia's busiest airport outside of Moscow and St. Petersburg), the $4 billion Kerch bridge and ports along with a tourism infrastructure, the region has been thriving economically under the Russian economic umbrella.
https://www.tourism-review.com/tourism-in-crimea-reports-huge-success-news12203